Founding

it was not formally established until 1788, the origins of the First African Baptist Church date to 1778, when George Liele organized a small congregation of black Baptists in Savannah. Born into slavery in Virginia in 1750, Liele was later brought to Georgia, where he experienced a profound religious awakening and resolved to lead a life of Christian service. With his master's blessing, Liele was ordained a Baptist minister in 1775 and began traveling the Savannah River, preaching the gospel to slaves living in South Carolina and Georgia.

During the Revolutionary War (1775-83) Liele encouraged his followers to support the British, who pledged to regard African Americans as free men in exchange for their service to the crown. Though many African Americans were reenslaved when the British were forced to evacuate their Tybee Island headquarters in 1782, after a three-year occupation, a number of Liele's followers fled the country, founding settlements and churches in Jamaica, Nova Scotia (in Canada), and Sierra Leone.

Andrew Bryan, who was baptized by Liele in 1782, carried on the ministry in Savannah after the war, holding regular worship services with the remaining members of Liele's congregation, despite suffering abuse from local whites. In January 1788, several years before white Baptists established a church in Savannah, church officials ordained Bryan and officially recognized the First Colored Church, renamed the First African Baptist Church in 1822. Bryan purchased his freedom a year and a half later and secured property on Mill Street, in Oglethorpe Ward, for the construction of a church to house his growing congregation.

Schism and Controversy

Despite opposition from many in Savannah's white community, the First African Baptist Church continued to grow in the first decades of the nineteenth century. In 1802 church elders organized another congregation, the Second African Baptist Church, to relieve overcrowding and better accommodate the more than 800 members belonging to the charter congregation. By 1831 the First African Baptist Church claimed more than 2,700 members.

despite their large number, Savannah's black Baptists remained confined by the region's code of racial etiquette. Andrew Marshall, Bryan's successor, ran afoul of the church's governing authority in 1832, when he extended an invitation on behalf of his congregation to a white evangelist who preached equality of the races before God. The white Sunbury Baptist Association suspended Marshall from his post and encouraged critics within the congregation to break ranks with the church's leadership. Though Marshall was later reinstated, 155 members withdrew from First African to form the Third African Baptist Church, later renamed First Bryan Baptist Church.

Following the schism, both First African and First Bryan churches continued to grow, and relations between the two congregations remained amicable until the 1880s, when their ministers advanced competing claims that theirs was the oldest black church in North America. Because they had retained ownership of the church originally constructed by Andrew Bryan following the schism, representatives from First Bryan claimed that their congregation was the rightful heir to Liele's ministry. First African, having retained the body's original name and the vast majority of its congregants, insisted otherwise.

In 1888 the Missionary Baptist Convention of Georgia appointed a special committee to consider the matter and render a judgment in advance of the organization's centennial celebration that June. After reviewing the relevant documents and church histories, the committee determined that First African was the direct descendant of Bryan's original congregation and therefore North America's oldest black church.

Though tensions subsided over time, both congregations still maintain similar claims; First African identifies itself as "the oldest black church in North America," while First Bryan claims to be the "oldest continuous black Baptist church in America." Augusta's Springfield Baptist Church claims a similar distinction, billing itself as the oldest African American congregation in the United States on the basis that it is descended from a church founded in 1773 in Silver Bluff, South Carolina.

First African in the Twentieth Century

First African retained its prominence from the late nineteenth through the twentieth centuries, with its ministers playing important leadership roles in the life of Savannah's black community. The Reverend E. K. Love, the church's sixth minister (1885-1900), was instrumental in the 1890 founding of the Georgia State Industrial College for Colored Youth (later Savannah State University).

the 1940s the Reverend Ralph Mark Gilbert (1939-56) almost single-handedly reinvigorated Savannah's dormant chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and later helped organize new branches throughout the state. (The Ralph Mark Gilbert Civil Rights Museum in Savannah is named in his honor.) Under Gilbert's dynamic leadership, First African became a center of resistance for Savannah's black community during the civil rights movement, opening its doors to a number of prominent national figures, including NAACP president Walter White, Martin Luther King Jr., and U.S. representative Adam Clayton Powell. The Reverend Curtis J. Jackson (1957-61) and the Reverend William Franklin Stokes (1963-73), who succeeded Gilbert, carried on First African's legacy of activism, organizing demonstrations and mass meetings to protest segregation in the city's public facilities.

First African has occupied its present location on Montgomery Street since 1859. Its museum, located on the church grounds, houses artifacts and church memorabilia dating from the eighteenth century.